breaking news in termsofenergyprices.the iea is out with its latest 2013 oil report. it expects u.s. oil demand to remain flat on the year. but the headline here does appear that the market, according to the iea language here, is tighter than we thought. all of a sudden, the market looks tighter than we thought. that's the main message we're getting from the organization. it says the world forecast to consume about 90.8 million barrels per day in 2013, up by about a quarter of a million since december. despite seeing the u.s. slight to even negative, seen as driving increase in demand and global supplies felly 170,000 barrels per day in december to 192 million. opec supplies falling to its lowest level in a year in december. global refinery rose by 1.5 million barrels per day. the oil market looks tighter than we thought and china has a lot to do with that. china's economy finally picked up pace in the fourth quarter. that gdp number came in above forecasts, growing 7.9% from a year earlier. industrial and retail sales grew estimates. to put it in context, china's growth is the we

this find of oil in iraq, it was near the iranian border. just today on press tv, theiranianenergyministersay this is share reserves. they want to move in. the context in iraq a kurdish conflict within are with the kurds have cut down their oil production from 100,000 barrels a day to 5,000 because they don't want baghdad to control it. so baghdad says, look, we found oil. we'll not be as dependent on the kurdish region. into this conflict america has been missing in action and iran is going to fill those voids if we stay asleep against political islam and its interests. melissa: steven, you make the great point this means that we should be more dependent on ourselves than ever before. we need the pipeline, but also pushes the focus to fracking and to shale. i worry especially with the president's speech yesterday and with the turnover that we're about to see at the department of energy that maybe we're going to see a crackdown on fracking and on shale here in the u.s. that really goes against our own self-interests. >> well, it really would. it really would be a shock, melissa i

alicia keys. i'm sorry. >> today is an incredible day. and you can feeltheenergyeverywherethat you go. in so many ways, every day is a new day. and a new chance. a new chance to be our best. to serve our highest purpose. yeah. so i'm going to need your help tonight because i'm up here all by myself. i just wanted it to be me and you. so help me celebrate this most momentous day. i'll tell you what to do. i need you to say -- ♪ ♪ people say eh ♪ ♪ it's a new day ♪ it's a new day ♪ getting ready, everybody ready ♪ ♪ eh oh, a new day ♪ a new day ♪ celebrate and say eh, eh ♪ celebrate and say eh ♪ yeah because he's president and he's on fire. hotter than a fab as they like a highway ♪ ♪ he's living in a world and it's on fire filled with catastrophe ♪ ♪ he has both feet on the ground and he's burning it down ♪ ♪ oh, oh got his head in the crowds and he's not breaking down ♪ ♪ he's walking on fire ♪ obama's on fire ♪ watch him as he's lighting up the night ♪ ♪ everybody knows the mission is his girl ♪ ♪ together they run the world ♪ bur

, one-fifth ofeurope'senergyneeds.so there are serious implications that could come out of this. >> suarez: you've got a nato partner in france fighting against a guerrilla army in mali. it's not an easy task, is it? >> not at all. from a logistical standpoint i thought the itn reporter was spot on when she talked about the logistical issues that are inherent in any kind of war, but they are particularly in hernt in one where the climate is difficult, where the terrain is almost impossible and where you're really not used to configureing your forces in a way that allows you to move rapidly in this kind of terrain. it's very much adown the american southwest and it is a very, very difficult area not only from the standpoint of things like temperature and mountains and things of that nature, it's the nature of the terrain that makes it very difficult to move from one point to another. >> suarez: we've been covering the fight in mali over the last several days but algeria hasn't been in the news for a long time. what's the state of play there? who's running the place? >> there's a

-fifth ofeurope'senergyneeds.so there are serious implications that could come out of this. >> suarez: you've got a nato partner in france fighting against a guerrilla army in mali. it's not an easy task is it? >> not at all. from a logistical standpoint i thought the itn reporter was spot on when she talked about the logistical issues that are inherent in any kind of war but they are particularly in hernt in one where the climate is difficult, where the terrain is almost impossible and where you're really not used to configureing your forces in a way that allows you to move rapidly in this kind of terrain. it's very much adown the american southwest and it is a very, very difficult area not only from the standpoint of things like temperature and mountains and things of that nature, it's the nature of the terrain that makes it very difficult to move from one point to another. >> suarez: we've been covering the fight in mali over the last several days but algeria hasn't been in the news for a long time. what's the state of play there? who's running the place? >> there's a government in alge

want to hear her. today is an incredible day, and you can feeltheenergyeverywherethat you go. you know, in so many ways, every day is a new day and a new change. a new chance to be our best. to serve our highest purpose, yeah. so i'm going to need your help tonight, you know, because i'm up here all by myself. i just wanted it to be me and you. so help me celebrate this most monumentis day. yeah, i'll tell you what to do. i need you to say eh eh eh eh. eh eh eh eh eh. ♪ how many people say eh it's a new day ♪ ♪ it's a new day ♪ everybody's getting ready for a new day for a new day ♪ ♪ eh eh eh eh eh ♪ gonna bring eh eh eh eh ♪ yeah because he's president and he's on fire ♪ ♪ hotter than a fantasy rolling like a highway ♪ ♪ he's living in a world and it's on fire ♪ ♪ filled with catastrophe but he knows he can fly away ♪ ♪ oh he's got both feet on the ground and he's burning it down ♪ ♪ ohhh hh got his head in the clouds and he's not backing down ♪ ♪ obama's on fire obama's on fire ♪ ♪ he's walking on fire obama's on fire ♪ ♪ whoo eve

andenergyissuesand i know you care about. hopefully next time we will get to that. >>> promises, promises. deep dive into the president's first term. campaign promises he made and the one he is kept, ones he didn't. and the one-time back burner issues that are quickly heating up. how many treasury secretaries became chiefs of staff? living with moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis means living with pain. it could also mean living with joint damage. humira, adalimumab, can help treat more than just the pain. for many adults, humira is clinically proven to help relieve pain and stop further joint damage. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal events, such as infections, lymphoma, or other types of cancer, have happened. blood, liver and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure have occurred. before starting humira, your doctor should test you for tb. ask your doctor if you live in or have been to a region where certain fungal infections are common. tell your doctor if you have had

? >> of algeria is animportantenergyexporterand an important country. this is a threat to of jury out. we see the expansion of rebels and these groups coming in, this is a potent threat and a huge area that needs to be dealt with. >> to syria where the bbc team has found evidence of a massacre that takes place on the edge of palms. our international correspondent has just returned from the village and it contains images some viewers might find distressing. >> of the army took the stand. the villages just around the corner from -- the army took us in. the village is just around the corner. there is a powerful sense of shock. one woman starts telling her story as soon as she sees us. they stormed into my house, she told me. they slapped my face, they stripped me and my daughters. most of the killings took place in houses down this hill. they have cleared the area and taken away the bodies. they persuaded us to take another route. in the first house they take as to -- us to a charred body. there is a bullet hole in the center of the forehead. full horror emerges. there is blood on the cement and

's got super-cute kangaroos. barrow island has got rare kangaroos. ♪ ♪ chevron has beendevelopingenergyherefor decades. we need to protect their environment. we have a strict quarantine system to protect the integrity of the environment. forty years on, it's still a class-a nature reserve. it's our job to look after them. ...it's my job to look after it. ♪ ♪ >> pelley: today president obama >>> today president obama called for comprehensive immigration reform, but getting a bill through congress will be a challenge. we asked bill whitaker to show us what is at stake. >> we need this president to push as hard as he can for immigration reform this year. latinos have cared about it and the election showed it. >> she crossed the border from mexico with her mother when she was 11. >> when you crossed the border illegally, what do you say to people to tell you that? >> give us a chance to give back to the country. we have a lot to continue >> president obama's deferred deportation program allows those who came illegally as children to work and study in the u.s.

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of priorities he wanted to pursue on health care, on financialregulation,energyandclimate change nthat sort o thing. a much bigger failure for the president in the first term, the goal of bringing the country together. part of his political identity when he broke on the national stage in 2004. we're a nation, not a blue nation, we're one united states of america. i think he's going to emphasize that and try to use that as a springboard into getting things done in the second term. >> he did put forth a lot of things he wanted to accomplish when he spoke to us in 2009. how many did he get done? >> health care, which was a huge accomplishment for him. something that bill and hillary clinton failed to do during their presidency. a democratic priority for decades. he got financial regulation, which is new rules for wall street, which are just in the process now are being impleme implemented, as health care is. neither had a full chance to take effect. he did not get his goals on energy and changing the energy foundations of the american economy. he's going to try to do some of that in his second

under my town. it's a game changer. ♪ it means cleaner, cheaperamerican-madeenergy. butwe've got to be careful how we get it. design the wells to be safe. thousands of jobs. use the most advanced technology to protect our water. billions in the economy. at chevron, if we can't do it right, we won't do it at all. we've got to think long term. we've got to think long term. ♪ a talking car. but i'll tell you what impresses me. a talking train. this ge locomotive can tell you exactly where it is, what it's carrying, while using less fuel. delivering whatever the world needs, when it needs it. ♪ after all, what's the point of talking if you don't have something important to say? ♪ >>> we're back. political director and chief white house correspondent chuck todd will take us inside the numbers of the latest poll as you tee up the second term, chuck. >> four years ago, enormous expectations for president obama. there were a lot of people, hope and change was big. this time, call it pragmatic hope as far as the public is concerned. as you see here, just less than 30% believe they'r

's about controllingourenergyfuture.all of these are part of the equation. and we can't just do one piece of it, and we can't let that piece prevent us or become a smoke screen for not acting on the others. so that is the challenge. how do you put that puzzle together, move forward in a balanced way, so we're funding those kinds of priorities that we need to grow? >> it's interesting, doris, as you look at the historical sweep as well. here is a very toxic atmosphere in washington. a carryover of, you know, difficult debates. and the president who's popular, has a unified party, but also seems reluctant to go out on a limb on some big areas where he thinks he's not going to get much cooperation from republicans. >> i'm not sure that's true. i think gun control. he came out with sweeping proposals. i mean, that's certainly out on a limb. you're not going to get a lot of support perhaps from republicans. but his idea, i think, is that if you educate the country -- you know, when he talked to you, he mentioned lincoln's quote. there's a second sentence to lincoln's quote. lincoln's fir

to americans here? >> of algeria is animportantenergyexporterand an important country. this is a threat to of jury out. we see the expansion of rebels and these groups coming in, this is a potent threat and a huge area that needs to be dealt with. >> to syria where the bbc team has found evidence of a massacre that takes place on the edge of palms. our international correspondent has just returned from the village and it contains images some viewers might find distressing. >> of the army took the stand. the villages just around the corner from -- the army took us in. the village is just around the corner. there is a powerful sense of shock. one woman starts telling her story as soon as she sees us. they stormed into my house, she told me. they slapped my face, they stripped me and my daughters. most of the killings took place in houses down this hill. they have cleared the area and taken away the bodies. they persuaded us to take another route. in the first house they take as to -- us to a charred body. there is a bullet hole in the center of the forehead. full horror emerges. there is

, that is not traditionally been the case after the shootings. it's the sort oftheenergyhasflooded to the nra. >> when you see some of the energy that's coming out from the gun control groups, i do think that that is rare, and i do think that that is meaningful. >> i also just think that we talked a lot about the future of the republican party, and we will do so in more detail in the next segment, but if you are trying to appeal to women, to independent voters, to people anywhere outside of these sort of districts in the south and the middle west, it's a -- let's listen to what david keene said about the ar-15. >> the ar-15, which is the semiautomatic weapon, the firearm that's most sold in this country, it's the most used in training and in competition, and in target shooting. in a lot of those cases a lot of ammunition is used and a lot of firing is done, and it's seen as more efficient. >> okay. the argument is it there tl is because we are having in competition we need to be as efficient as possible and do you know how long it would take to reload if that magazine was limited to seven bullets? i'm see

. immigration reform, how to move our economy forward, how to buildanenergyeconomythat creates jobs that deals with climate change. there's clear consensus on those issues and we'll come with that consensus and we'll work together to pass the proposals the president has laid out. i think our supporters are really excited to do this, and i think that there is, you know, a very good chance we can be pretty effective. >> walk me through what this will be, are we talking phone banks? are we talking door to door, or raising money for television ads? what will be the department admission here? >> we'll do it all, but the most important thing is always going to be the grassroots. we will continue to build neighborhood team organizations of neighbors talking to neighbors and we know that worked when two presidential elections and we know how we got health care done and we know it's the only way to tackle these big challenges that you and i talked about and that's how it will look. will we run tv ads? of course, we will. we'll build a grassroots mobilization effort to say to washington it's

in an education, investinginenergyisthe way we are going to move the country forward. >> i want to let you know what's going on, we are about to see the president come onto the inaugural platform. that's what everybody is waiting for there. i'm sorry, go ahead. >> and i think this is going to be a real conversation that he's got to win with the american people that we can do something about our finances and still accomplish all those investments to take us to the next level of energy independence, of education, competing on the world platform in education. and doing the infrastructure that we are talking about when it comes to rail, when it comes to bridges, when it comes to the basics that help businesses across america. how are you going to do that? and how are you going to convince the republicans that you have to make these investments if you are going to move the country forward? we have two different philosophies on how to create jobs in this country. republicans think the government doesn't have a role. president obama, the democrats, the progressive community believe that you have

energy. whatto do find overall? guest: a lot of that area was included in the economic stimulus bill. it was a big grab bag, $787 billion of goodies that included many things for energy and the environment. i don't recall offhand the overall ratings for energy but i know a lot were included in the economic stimulus bill. host: is president obama making fewer promises that he was initially? guest: absolutely, the 2012 campaign was a campaign of attacks. when we look back at the moments of the campaign, as you look at the debates, what they were sitting on the campaign trail, what they were saying in commercials -- they spent some months of the time attacking each other and relatively little really laying out their agenda in any detail. particularly, mitt romney did not provide any details about his tax plan but even obama spent some much time attacking the romney that there were fewer promises made. there was less of an agenda. host: one last look at theobameter - he has made progress on 73% of his promises. thank you for being here this morning. coming up next is our regular america

energywe'renotspendingenoughenergyonumm grags. we're not spending enough 234r7b8g on the miss energy on the miss kwal problem -- on the fiscal problem. presidents don't get to choose what they do. they deal with what is before them and what they'd like to long term. >> governor, i'm curious to get your thoughts on the package of reforms. it was interesting that the vice president was tasked with this and they put out this package and i just also wanted to say that i thought you handled the horror in newtown with tremendous grace. >> thank you. i appreciate that. and you know, when you're in connecticut, painfully aware of how traumatic that's been for every resident of connecticut, particularly the families and residents of the families of deceased and the residents of newtown. being down here for a few days it's remarkable on how it has affected everyone. and it's a different perspective. we get in the fox hole a little bit and in connecticut over this. i spent about 1:20 with the vice president on friday at his office. lequacious as he is, we both tend to go on a little bit

f.d.a. saying he was here to change america, specificallytheenergyandhealth care, and he put out the stimulus so i expect he will give us inaugural address which will likely not be memorable and he will come out slashing, fighting, and probably trying to marginalize republicans at the state of the union address because he has an ambitious agenda and he wants do go after it because he sees himself as world historyical. >>bret: but if it is ambitious at some point republicans have to figure into that, so, there has to be some coming together at some point. he has activated the campaign arm to do a grass roots effort to try to go to the outside and get people activated to pressure lawmakers on the inside will take ma a difference? >> i doubt it. president obama won 51 percent of the vote a clear victory, but it is not as if the country is overwhelmingly on his side on all the issues. the way he handled gun control, the issue he did not expect to deal with and he put it first, understandably, i suppose, but he did not privately meet with republicans including republican moderates. th

other sub budgets and apermanentenergy. domestically,we have a much higher unemployment rate in 1968. we have more poverty absolutely and relatively and 1968. we certainly have more home foreclosures and more consumer debt. of course, 30 million workers are making today less than the workers made in 1968 adjusted for inflation. that is why we're launching this national drive to overpower congress and split the republicans in congress, organized and what the democrats, so tens of billions of dollars are poured into the community, into the long deserved pockets of these people, many of whom have children and they don't have health insurance or paid sick leave or big vacations. but they deserve $10.50 minimum wage, which is what it would be in 1968. no big deal. >> explain how that would work, how does an increase in the minimum wage actually work? >> 1, congress can pass it for all of the states. there is no competition between the states that way in terms of wage levels, no competition between businesses, etc. everyone would have to pay the same minimum wage. the other way is what has

. and help ensure a constant supply ofcleanenergy. thethings we build share one belief. that the world's biggest challenges deserve even bigger solutions. powerful answers. verizon. try running four.ning a restaurant is hard, fortunately we've got ink. it gives us 5x the rewards on our internet, phone charges and cable, plus at office supply stores. rewards we put right back into our business. this is the only thing we've ever wanted to do and ink helps us do it. make your mark with ink from chase. >> welcome back. you are looking live at some of the floating being put together for the big parade tomorrow. there are eight custom design floats. there are more than 10,000 participants in the parade tomorrow. it's a mile and-a-half long. but it is quite something to see, as you look at one of those great shots. we don't have these all the time. isn't that great? we have do this all the time. >> really putting on its best face. >> i think we should do this all the time. >> i think we should steal these for special report. >> done. >> president obama has had a distinctive relationship with

hands? thenaturalenergyofpeanuts and delicious, soft caramel. to fill you up and keep you moving, whatever your moves. payday. fill up and go! >> ana: reporter bales is an u.s. soldier facing charges of murder in a military court after he allegedly murdered 16 afghani civilians mostly you women and children. this is extremely complex. we have more details on the story. >> staff sergeant robert bales is the suspect of a began civilian murder last weekend. >> he seems to be unaware of some of the facts i talked to him about which makes me concerned about his state of mind. >> attorney brown said staff sergeant bales served three tours in iraq where he suffered a trauma why can brain injury. he also witnessed a brutal attack on another soldier the day before the incident. >> he did not want to be deployed but he was deployed any way and he was diagnosed with ptsd. the mental health concern of our military is a big problem. it has been the topic of discussion for quite awhile now. the question is whether or not we're doing enough to solve this issue. these soldiers are going to war m

schools fail too many and each day brings further evidence that the way weuseenergystrengthensour a adversarie adversaries. >> in light of where we stand today. >> the president says there is a spending probl is-- the spending problem before he came into office, roughly 2.5 trillion in revenues, and about 2.9, just less than 2.9. 2.8 trillion in spending. today revenues have recovered so that this year they'll be at 2.9 trillion. they're over 300 billion dollars from where they were when he came into office, but spending has gone up to 3.5 1/2 trillion dollars. you know, the revenues have recovered, but the spending has far outpaced it and he's not willing to make the hard choices and the amazing thing is, it was his own commission, a bipartisan commission, erskine bowles and senator simpson, simpson-bowles commission with recommendations on tough choices that needed to be made to rein in the future growth of entitlement spending and he rejected that today in the speech explicitly. >> sean: let me go back, this is personal for you, obviously, serving with president bush as long as

. it will provide its own foodandenergy, produceits own tv and film content in its own studio. it will house a theme park and a residential community. and create a national learning center where people can send their kids to, in glenn's words be deprogrammed. i say bring it on, glenn! afterall man you've conquered radio, tv, internet. you have chased away more sponsors than lindsay lohan did at betty ford. america is ready for the glenn beck version of disneyland with rides like the glenn beck emotional roller coaster where kids can cry and scream and cry and scream until roger ailes fires them. image an chalkboard created community on the premise of ayn rand combined with a christer with shep that ignores his teachings. imagine having your kids deprogrammed by glenn beck. where all of that annoying education can be sucked out and your kids can be taught the things that really matter like how the deficit's been destroying the country since january 21, 2009. how zor owes is a hungarian term for class traitor and a man can still have a

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